AccountAbility’s (AA) AA1000 Assurance Standard is one of the dominant environmental, social and governance (ESG) assurance standards. Adopting AA1000 avoids the need to expend resources on creating tailored guidelines. The framework’s flexibility enables it to be adopted by businesses of all sizes and industries – its scope can be customized to your company’s needs.
AA1000 was founded on the principles of:
AA1000 emphasizes the need for organizations to engage effectively with stakeholders, identify material sustainability issues and demonstrate the existence of a responsible business strategy.
We can support you through the process, enabling you to enhance trust, reputation, stakeholder attraction and, when tied to financial lending, reduce capital costs.
An absolute target is defined by the reduction in absolute emissions over time.
Active ownership is a responsible investing method that influences an organization’s decisions and actions by engaging with the organization as a shareholder. It involves using the rights and position of ownership to impact investee companies’ activities or behaviors. Active ownership can be applied differently per asset class but, for listed entities, it involves engagement and voting activities.
Active transport means traveling via a physical activity like walking, cycling, running, skateboarding or scooting.
Adaptive capacity refers to the ability of systems, institutions, humans and other organisms to adjust to potential damage to seize opportunities or respond to consequences.
Afforestation sees new forests planted on lands that have never contained forests.
Agflation concerns the increase in food prices due to heightened demand for food for human consumption and energy.
Agrichar is a black carbon byproduct of pyrolysis. Some suggest that it can improve soil’s ability to store carbon.
Air pollution is the contamination of the environment by any physical, chemical or biological agent that changes natural atmospheric characteristics. Air pollution and its impact on air quality are linked to our climate and ecosystems. Many air pollution drivers, such as burning fossil fuels, also emit carbon.
An air quality index (AQI) highlights a specific area or country’s air contamination or expected pollution levels. It is a combination of pollution types. Different nations have their own AQIs corresponding to other air quality standards.
Alternative energy has two categories:
Alternative energy sources are vital to climate mitigation.
Anaerobic digestion is the natural process of decomposition and decay, where organic material breaks down into simpler chemical components under anaerobic conditions, i.e. without oxygen.
The atmosphere is the layer of gases that envelopes the Earth. The atmosphere comprises nitrogen (about 80%), oxygen (about 20%), argon (about 1%), carbon dioxide (0.05%) and trace gases, including neon, helium, methane and krypton.
Avoided emissions quantify the emissions saved by products and services that can substitute high-carbon activities with low-carbon options. For example, replacing fossil-fuel power generation with wind or solar decreases economy-wide emissions.
The base year is the date chosen as the starting point against which emissions are tracked over time.
Base year emissions refer to the volume of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions generated in the base year.
Base year emissions recalculation concerns recalculating emissions in the base year due to a change in the organization or accounting methodology that determines the emissions level to ensure data consistency over time.
Best-in-class refers to an entity, such as an organization or country, that leads in sustainability practices and performance.
Beyond value chain mitigation (BVCM) refers to measures to prevent, decrease or eliminate greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions outside their value chain. Compensation and neutralization can be considered BVCM and additional to decarbonization, rather than its substitute.
Biodegradable is something that decays into its basic components and blends into the Earth without harming the environment. No toxins are left behind.
Biodegradable municipal waste (BMW) degrades and is better known as rubbish, garbage or trash.
Biodiesel is a renewable fuel for diesel engines. It comes from natural oils, such as soybean oil.
Biodiversity concerns the diversity of flora and fauna on Earth. Human-caused environmental damage reduces biodiversity. Creating a healthy, sustainable society requires increasing biodiversity.
Bioethanol is a substitute for gasoline/petrol. It comes from cereal-based crops, such as wheat, maize (corn) and sugarcane.
Biofuels are fuels that come from biological sources, such as crops, new and used vegetable oils, animal fats and various waste. They can complement or replace traditional fossil fuels. However, each biofuel’s greenhouse gas (GHG) mitigation potential can vary considerably.
Biomass, or biogas, is a substitute for natural gas. It is the biodegradable part of waste, products and residues from different industries like agriculture, forestry, aquaculture and fisheries. Biomass can be converted into electricity, burned to create heat or processed into biofuels. Because it is a fuel, some people use biomass and biofuel interchangeably. Biomass is a renewable organic material.
Plant-, wood- and other bio-waste are the most common biomass types used for energy. Biomass is a solid material that can be turned into biogas, mainly methane (CH₄), through microorganisms when there is no oxygen, also known as anaerobic digestion.
Biomimicry is a design that seeks sustainable solutions by mimicking nature. The aim is to create products and services that adapt to life on Earth over the long term.
Biophilia is the love of life, living and the affinity for living things.
Blackwater is contaminated wastewater that must be drained from a building into blackwater pipes to avoid mixing with graywater.
A blue economy involves economic activities that create sustainable wealth from the oceans and coasts.
Bluewater, or blue water, refers to surface and groundwater.
Bluewashing happens when an organization overstates its commitment to responsible social practices or hides information on its socially damaging practices.
A business model is a plan for successfully operating a business, identifying revenue sources, customer base, products and financing. Sustainability factors like social causes can be incorporated, too.
Business resilience is an organization’s ability to adapt in a changing environment to enable it to achieve objectives and prosper.
Business sustainability, or corporate sustainability, refers to ethically and responsibly managing an organization’s continued success with environmental, social and financial concerns.
Business transformation is about making bold and fundamental changes to business operations, rather than incremental changes to the status quo.
Byproduct means excess materials produced. Companies will try to limit their byproducts for sustainability and financial reasons.
Carbon (C) is an element essential to life on Earth. It makes up the fats and carbohydrates of food and is part of molecules, such as DNA and protein, that make up our bodies.
Carbon accounting, also known as greenhouse gas (GHG) accounting, includes systematic methodologies, measurement and monitoring to evaluate and quantify an entity or activity’s carbon dioxide equivalent (CO₂e).
Carbon accounting can measure all GHG emissions, such as carbon dioxide (CO₂), methane (CH₄), nitrous oxide (N₂O) and fluorinated gases (F-gases). Gases, besides carbon, are expressed as carbon equivalents. It is a popular way for governments, businesses and individuals to assess and report their climate impact. The benefits include maintaining compliance, minimizing risk, enhancing brand equity and reducing inefficiency.
Importantly, carbon, or more specifically CO₂, is the main GHG resulting from human activities, but it is not the only one. Carbon is sometimes used inaccurately to describe all GHG activities.
The EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) places a carbon price on imports of products from countries with less ambitious national climate change policies. Proposed by the European Commission in 2021, the system aims to prevent carbon leakage. Part of the European Green Deal, the CBAM is expected to come into force in 2026.
The carbon budget is the amount of greenhouse gases (GHGs) that humanity can emit into the atmosphere by the end of this century and still limit the global temperature increase compared to pre-industrial levels (1850-1900).
According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the atmosphere can absorb, calculated from the beginning of 2020, no more than 400 gigatons of carbon dioxide (CO₂) if we are to stay below the Paris Agreement’s 1.5°C threshold. The carbon budget concerns an almost linear relationship between cumulative emissions and temperature rise.
Carbon capture and storage (CCS) involves capturing carbon dioxide (CO₂) from chemical or biomass power plants and storing it to reduce CO₂ emissions. The technologies involved include forestry and air-filtering machinery that capture airborne CO₂. Innovative compensation efforts often include CCS mechanisms.
A carbon credit is a tradable certificate or permit that incentivizes a company to reduce its emissions. When organizations create carbon offsetting initiatives, they receive a transferable or tradeable carbon credit or token. A credit allows the company to emit greenhouse gases (GHGs) and compensate for this elsewhere. A credit represents one ton of carbon dioxide (CO₂) reduced or removed from the atmosphere.
A company sets an emissions cap, which is reduced periodically. If a company exceeds this limit, it is fined. Unused certificates can be sold to other companies. The certificates are a market-oriented mechanism for decreasing GHG emissions. The number of available credits is reduced over time to reduce GHGs. In practice, these credits let owners reduce GHG emissions to get closer to net zero.
The term also refers to purchased credits that fund emission-reducing projects.
The carbon cycle includes the processes in which carbon (C) atoms circulate through Earth’s land, ocean, atmosphere and interior.
Carbon dioxide (CO₂) is a colorless, odorless gas comprising one part carbon and two parts oxygen. It is a natural component of Earth’s atmosphere and is one of the most common greenhouse gases (GHGs).
CO₂ is released through human activities, such as burning fossil fuels and deforestation, as well as natural processes. Because humans release more CO₂ into the atmosphere than current biological processes remove, the CO₂ level in the atmosphere and oceans increases annually. Other GHGs include methane (CH₄), nitrous oxide (N₂O) and fluorinated gases (F-gases).
Carbon dioxide equivalent (CO₂e) is a single-unit metric to harmonize emissions from different greenhouse gases (GHGs) based on their global warming potential (GWP).
In GHG accounting, CO₂e is more accurate than CO₂ alone, as it covers the GWPs of all GHGs that capture heat and warm Earth’s atmosphere.
Carbon emissions, or greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, are the carbon dioxide (CO₂) emissions released into the atmosphere. CO₂ is the primary GHG emitted from human activities.
A carbon footprint measures the total greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, in carbon equivalents, produced by an individual, practice, product, organization or nation-state’s activities over time.
Carbon footprint verification (CFV) aims to verify an organization’s carbon footprint. An organization must collect data on emissions caused by its activities, products and services. Once collected, an independent body, such as SGS, can verify the data accuracy and organization’s carbon footprint to help the organization understand the level of emissions it needs to reduce and/or offset to become carbon neutral.
CFV is essential to providing credibility and reassuring stakeholders that the organization’s carbon footprint is accurate, absolute and compliant with major greenhouse gas (GHG) reporting standards.
Carbon insetting seeks to reduce an organization’s emissions and carbon footprint within its supply chain or industry. The strategy involves investing in nature-based solutions, such as reforestation, agroforestry, renewable energy and regenerative agriculture. These aim to sequester carbon and create positive impacts for communities, landscapes and ecosystems linked to the company’s value chain.
Carbon intensity refers to a group, individual, organization or country’s carbon emissions per unit of economic activity. Example include sales, gross domestic product (GDP) or power generation.
Carbon labeling concerns the amount of embedded carbon in a product.
Carbon leakage refers to an organization relocating its activities to countries with weaker carbon and sustainability legislation. This can see the organization’s carbon footprint rise due to more ability to pollute and the environmental costs of transportation.
Relocating to less regulated countries can also create inaccurate carbon measurements, skewing the carbon emissions mapping and attribution. The risk of carbon leakage may be higher in energy-intensive industries.
A carbon market is a voluntary or legally operated system that enables carbon credit trading between private and public entities. Carbon markets take many forms, such as cap-and-trade systems or carbon taxes, but the main principle remains – use market power to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and mitigate the effects of climate change.
The aim is to create an economic incentive for companies to reduce their emissions, as they can sell unused allowances to others who need them. The Kyoto Protocol defined the first carbon market, creating three mechanisms to achieve emissions reductions:
Carbon negative is attained when a company’s activities go beyond achieving net-zero carbon emissions by removing additional carbon dioxide (CO₂) from the atmosphere.
Carbon neutral is a condition in which, during a specified period, the carbon footprint has been reduced due to greenhouse gas (GHG) emission reductions or removal enhancements and, if greater than zero, is then counterbalanced by offsetting.
Carbon offsetting, or compensation, is the voluntary or mandatory purchase of carbon credits to balance an entity’s emissions. The price of a carbon credit used for compensation is the benchmark when comparing an investment for direct internal reductions.
Some greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions are impossible to avoid, and compensation through carbon credits helps achieve climate neutrality and net-zero objectives. Compensation includes investing in renewables, energy efficiency, reforestation, carbon capture and carbon storage through planting trees or restoring lands.
Carbon positive, also known as climate positive, is used by companies to announce their move beyond carbon neutrality by reducing/removing more greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions than they are generating.
Carbon pricing assigns a cost to emitting carbon dioxide (CO₂) into the atmosphere, usually via a fee per ton of CO₂ emitted, or limiting total emissions organizations can produce and issuing permits. Placing a cost on emissions is considered the most efficient way to encourage entities to decrease their emissions.
The Carbon Reduction Commitment (CRC) scheme applies mandatory emissions trading to cut carbon emissions from large commercial and public sector organizations.
Decarbonization concerns removing or reducing all human-made carbon emissions in the atmosphere. It is achieved through cross-cutting measures to decrease or eliminate carbon emissions from an organization or individual’s activities.
Decarbonization differs from climate neutrality because it aims to reduce absolute carbon emissions and intensity. Climate neutrality does not necessarily include decarbonization, as climate neutrality can be achieved solely through buying carbon credits.
Decentralized energy (DE) sees energy produced on a local scale, away from a conventional large-scale power plant production process.
Deforestation is the process of harvesting forests for natural resources or to clear land for agriculture or construction. This harms the environment because the converted land usually emits carbon and, with fewer trees, is less capable of absorbing carbon dioxide (CO₂). Deforestation that happens faster than forests are able to recover causes environmental damage, such as biodiversity loss and climate change.
A digital carbon footprint is the amount of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions digital devices, tools and platforms produce. All technology, such as cloud computing, mobile phones and internet use, produce a digital carbon footprint.
Digital sobriety aims to limit the harmful environmental impact of smartphones, internet use, digital media and other technologies daily. Moving toward sobriety includes actions like buying fewer devices and lower-power machines, deleting emails, choosing lower-definition media consumption and sustainably developing software.
Direct emissions, or direct greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, come from sources owned, produced and controlled by an organization. These are scope 1 emissions, according to the Greenhouse Gas Protocol (GHG Protocol). To note, indirect emissions are the consequence of the reporting organization’s activities, but are controlled or produced by another business.
Disclosure, such as environmental, social and governance (ESG) disclosures and reports, sees an organization evaluate and disclose its ESG-related data covering business operations, opportunities and risks. Organizations measure and disclose risks using a selected sustainability framework or frameworks. Capital markets and purchasing organizations use such data to inform decisions.
Carbon dioxide (CO₂) is a colorless, odorless gas comprising one part carbon and two parts oxygen. It is a natural component of Earth’s atmosphere and is one of the most common greenhouse gases (GHGs).
CO₂ is released through human activities, such as burning fossil fuels and deforestation, as well as natural processes. Because humans release more CO₂ into the atmosphere than current biological processes remove, the CO₂ level in the atmosphere and oceans increases annually. Other GHGs include methane (CH₄), nitrous oxide (N₂O) and fluorinated gases (F-gases).
Carbon dioxide equivalent (CO₂e) is a single-unit metric to harmonize emissions from different greenhouse gases (GHGs) based on their global warming potential (GWP).
In GHG accounting, CO₂e is more accurate than CO₂ alone, as it covers the GWPs of all GHGs that capture heat and warm Earth’s atmosphere.
Carbon emissions, or greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, are the carbon dioxide (CO₂) emissions released into the atmosphere. CO₂ is the primary GHG emitted from human activities.
A carbon footprint measures the total greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, in carbon equivalents, produced by an individual, practice, product, organization or nation-state’s activities over time.
Carbon footprint verification (CFV) aims to verify an organization’s carbon footprint. An organization must collect data on emissions caused by its activities, products and services. Once collected, an independent body, such as SGS, can verify the data accuracy and organization’s carbon footprint to help the organization understand the level of emissions it needs to reduce and/or offset to become carbon neutral.
CFV is essential to providing credibility and reassuring stakeholders that the organization’s carbon footprint is accurate, absolute and compliant with major greenhouse gas (GHG) reporting standards.
Eco-conscious is the mentality of focusing on reducing environmental impacts wherever possible.
An eco-district is a collaborative planning approach focusing on regenerative urban development at the neighborhood level.
An eco-footprint is the area of natural resources a human population requires to produce the products it consumes and to absorb its waste.
Eco-friendly generally concerns environmentally minded actions that cause minimal harm to the Earth. When it comes to marketing and green marketing, using “eco-friendly” is best avoided, as it is vague and fluid, and can impact your business. See our Greenwashing definition.
Your ecological footprint measures how much natural resources you use daily and the land your lifestyle requires. A person or community’s environmental impact is the amount of land needed to sustain its use of natural resources.
Ecological restoration is the complex process of artificially restoring an ecosystem to its original form. However, research suggests that once an ecosystem is damaged, it is almost impossible to restore it to its original form. That said, ecological restoration is still a crucial process.
An electric vehicle, or EV, runs on electricity powered by a rechargeable battery.
Electronic waste, or e-waste, concerns electronics at or close to the end of their useful lives. Green technology and sustainability approaches aim to extend the useful life of devices, using circular economy features to minimize e-waste. The priority is to reduce waste before refurbishing devices and moving toward recycling.
Embedded carbon, or embodied carbon, describes how the carbon footprint of a product (CFP), as measured by a full life cycle assessment, is usually measured in kilogram of carbon dioxide equivalent (kgCO₂e) per kg of material.
Embedded water, which has numerous different names, concerns the amount of water used to produce a good end to end.
Emissions, or emissions to air, are all the gases, including pollutants, greenhouse gases (GHGs) and other substances, that could potentially impact air quality and contribute to environmental changes. Since industrialization, human activities have significantly transformed our atmosphere’s chemical composition through greenhouse gas (GHG) and substance release.
Energy efficiency involves using the lowest amount of energy possible to provide power. It aims to see the same task or result achieved with less energy.
Environmental justice aims to treat all people, regardless of race, color, nationality or income, fairly regarding environmental laws, regulations and policies. The approach states that no group should have a disproportionate share of negative environmental consequences.
Environmental management systems include processes and practices that enable an organization to reduce its environmental impact. The most common framework is ISO 14001 – environmental management systems.
Environmental, social and governance (ESG) uses standard criteria to evaluate and demonstrate an organization’s sustainability performance and success.
Stakeholders expect organizations to not only deliver financial performance but also positively contribute to society:
ESG is the basis for numerous regulations, such as the Non-Financial Reporting Directive (NFRD), Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR).
The growing interest in measuring and ranking ESG by investors and businesses reflects the perspective that ESG should be factored in when considering business success.
The Fairtrade Foundation provides principles, including better prices, safe working conditions, local sustainability and fair terms of trade for farmers and workers.
The FAIRTRADE mark is used on products certified against internationally recognized Fairtrade standards.
A feed-in tariff is a policy to accelerate renewable energy investments. It usually involves long-term government contracts to ensure a fixed price for renewable energy generation to incentivize investments in renewables.
Food miles refers to the distance food is transported, from its preparation to reaching the consumer. Food miles is one factor considered when determining the environmental impact of food.
Forest degradation sees a forest deteriorate so it no longer supports people and wildlife, for example, by filtering air for breathing and water for drinking, and providing animals with food and homes.
The main cause of forest degradation is unsustainable and illegal logging. Climate change, particularly higher temperatures and unpredictable weather patterns, also increases the risk and severity of forest fires, disease and pest infestation.
A forest risk commodity is a material derived from forests or woodland used for production and sees forests converted for agricultural use.
The seven commodities responsible for most agricultural deforestation are:
The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) is an independent, non-governmental, not-for-profit organization established to respond to global deforestation concerns.
It provides internationally recognized standards setting, trademark assurance and accreditation for organizations and communities interested in responsible forestry.
Fossil fuels, such as coal, oil and natural gas, are materials formed naturally in the Earth’s crust from dead plants and animals over millennia. They are extracted and mainly used for fuel.
According to the UN, over 80% of carbon dioxide (CO₂) generated by humans comes from burning fossil fuels.
Their extraction, combustion and emissions negatively affect the carbon cycle that, in balanced states, allows climate stability and a functioning biosphere.
Freecycle is the act of exchanging goods to extend their life cycle and keep reusable items out of landfills.
The gender pay gap concerns equality and indicates the difference between men and women’s average or median earnings.
Geothermal energy is a renewable energy source derived from hot water or steam within the Earth that typically creates electricity.
According to earth science, the global surface temperature is calculated by averaging the temperature at the surface of the sea and air temperature over land.
In technical writing, scientists call long-term changes in GST global cooling or global warming. Periods of both have happened regularly throughout Earth’s history.
The global average temperature has warmed by 1.09°C (range 0.95-1.20°C) from 1850-1900 to 2011-2020.
Global warming is the gradual heating of Earth’s surface due to trapped greenhouse gases (GHGs) from human activities, mainly burning fossil fuels, that increase heat-trapping GHG levels in the atmosphere. This is observed since the pre-industrial period (1850-1900).
The phenomenon has always occurred, but we are primarily concerned with human-caused (anthropogenic) global warming. This defines how human behavior impacts the speed and intensity of the planet’s heating.
Climate change includes warming and its side effects, such as melting glaciers and more frequent droughts.
The global warming potential (GWP) index helps measure the relative warming effects of greenhouse gases (GHGs), using carbon dioxide (CO₂) as the baseline and harmonizing all gases as CO₂ equivalents.
Due to these gases’ differing lifetime effects, e.g. methane (CH₄) dissipates quicker than CO₂, the appropriate time horizon is crucial.
Green means behavior, products, policies and people, etc., that minimize environmental change.
Green bonds raise finances for environmentally sustainable or climate-related investments. They are like traditional bonds because they pay interest to investors. However, proceeds from their sale are specifically reserved for projects with positive environmental impacts.
They are usually issued with the same credit rating as the issuer’s traditional bonds, and the maturity, coupon and other terms are like those of other bonds. However, green bonds might have additional features, such as the use of proceeds, to ensure funds are for a specific environmental project.
Green bonds are subject to independent review and certification to ensure proceeds are going to eligible green projects.
The demand for green bonds has grown in recent years, as investor interest in environmentally friendly investments increases. Green bonds help finance renewable energy, energy efficiency, sustainable transportation and water treatment plants, among others. They also help raise awareness, encourage investment in environmental projects and help align financial markets with Paris Agreement goals.
A green building is based on ecological principles to maintain a healthy structure that minimizes environmental impacts. Crucial features include decreasing or eliminating adverse ecological effects while creating positive developments.
The green cloud concerns the possible environmental benefits for IT services stored or transferred over the internet. Considered a buzzword, the alleged benefits could enable technologists to feel that further efforts to reduce carbon footprints are unnecessary.
Green computing is a sustainable approach to using computers, devices and equipment. Examples include reducing resource use, responsibly disposing of e-waste and deploying energy-efficient IT equipment.
Green hushing refers to companies intentionally hiding sustainability goals. Reasons include the fear of greenwashing accusations or falling short of stated goals.
Green IT is the practice of designing, manufacturing, operating and disposing of IT products and devices to minimize the negative effects of operations on the environment.
Green marketing highlights a product or service and a company’s environmental credentials, but there is a fine line between green marketing and greenwashing.
Green marketing is when organizations sell products or services, or produce environmental, social and governance (ESG) reports, based on genuine environmental positives and data. This is enhanced by third-party verification.
Green marketing is considered honest and transparent, and meets several criteria:
Beware – if green marketing is based on falsehoods or does not meet sustainable business practice standards, the organization could be accused of greenwashing and receive hefty penalties, negative press and reputational damage.
Green premium was coined by Bill Gates. It refers to the economic and environmental costs of choosing clean technology over financially sound options with higher greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
Green software is applications designed, developed and implemented to minimize energy consumption and environmental effects.
The greenhouse effect happens when naturally occurring greenhouse gases (GHGs), such as carbon dioxide (CO₂), methane (CH₄), nitrogen oxide (N₂O) and fluorinated gases (HFCs), build up in the Earth’s atmosphere. This traps the Sun’s heat as it reflects from the Earth’s surface, warming the planet and increasing global temperatures.
Without the natural greenhouse effect, the global mean temperature would be -18°C, therefore uninhabitable for humans. Humans amplify the natural greenhouse effect by releasing GHGs when burning fossil fuels like coal, oil and gas.
High emitters are organizations or countries that emit comparatively high greenhouse gas (GHG) volumes. Per capita emissions are used to measure national emissions.
Human capital management (HCM) covers practices and tools to attract, recruit, train, develop, manage and retain staff to achieve business goals. Organizations that depend on staff to achieve goals allocate resources to develop the employee skills needed to deliver results.
Human rights are basic rights that should belong to all people. They include the right to life, liberty, free speech and freedom from slavery. The UN’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) is seen as the benchmark for these basic rights.
A hybrid vehicle is primarily powered by a conventional internal combustion engine (ICE) but supplemented with power from regenerative braking.
A plug-in hybrid electric vehicle has a rechargeable battery that recharges when connected via a charging cable to an external electric power source, additional to internally by the vehicle’s ICE-powered generator.
Hydrogen (H2) is the most abundant element in the universe. The Sun and stars are comprised mainly of hydrogen. It is a very light, colorless, odorless and tasteless gas, and can be an energy source.
It makes up less than 2% of current energy consumption in Europe and is mostly used for developing complex chemical products.
Hydrogen, when used as a fuel, produces only water and is an important element of the EU’s Energy System Integration Strategy.
Impact investing, or socially responsible investing, concerns investments made to try to generate positive, measurable social and environmental impacts, alongside a financial return.
Impact investments can be made in emerging and developed markets, and target a range of returns, from below market to market rate, depending on the investor’s strategic goals.
The growing impact investment market provides capital to address the world’s most pressing challenges in sectors, such as sustainable agriculture, renewable energy, conservation, microfinance and affordable and accessible basic services like housing, healthcare and education.
Impact measurement refers to measuring how organizations’ activities affect the world, positively and negatively.
An impact sourcing strategy directs employment and career development opportunities toward people from economically disadvantaged backgrounds.
Incineration, or direct combustion, involves the controlled burning of municipal solid waste to reduce waste volume and produce energy.
The Greenhouse Gas Protocol (GHG Protocol) describes indirect emissions as scope 2 and 3 emissions. They are a consequence of an organization’s activities but are owned or controlled by another entity. Indirect emissions examples include purchased electricity, waste disposal and business travel.
Integrated reporting is an approach to corporate reporting that integrates financial and non-financial information, such as sustainability data, into a single document showing a company’s performance.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is a UN body for researching and advancing human-induced climate change knowledge. Established in 1988, the body comprises 195 member states and is headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland.
The IPCC assembles comprehensive assessment reports concerning the state of “scientific, technical and socioeconomic knowledge on climate change.” Each report has directly powered international climate change policymaking.
In 2007, the IPCC and former US Vice President Al Gore jointly received the Nobel Peace Prize “for their efforts to build up and disseminate greater knowledge about man-made climate change, and to lay the foundations for the measures that are needed to counteract such change.”
Internal carbon pricing is a corporate financial strategy where a business assigns a monetary value to its carbon emissions, usually as a price per ton of carbon dioxide (CO₂) emitted. This internal price guides decision-making across the organization, encouraging investments in cleaner, more efficient technologies and practices.
Internal carbon pricing helps organizations internalize the external costs of their carbon emissions, aligning business operations with broader sustainability goals and regulatory environments. This facilitates the reduction of a company’s carbon footprint and incentivizes innovation in low-carbon technologies.
The International Standard on Assurance Engagements 3000 (ISAE 3000) is one of the dominant environmental, social and governance (ESG) assurance standards. ISAE 3000 underscores the importance of data quality, reporting procedures, controls and evidence-gathering processes.
Reasonable assurance engagements
The assurance provider must obtain sufficient evidence to form an opinion, like that of a financial statement audit. The assurance provider expresses an opinion, such as whether the sustainability report is complete and accurate, based on the identified criteria.
Limited assurance engagements
The assurance provider must obtain a meaningful level of assurance to form a conclusion, expressed as negative assurance in the assurance report.
ISO 14001 applies to all organizations and the environmental aspects of their activities, products and services that can control or influence, from a life-cycle perspective. The standard specifies environmental management system (EMS) requirements to enhance your organization’s environmental performance. With ISO 14001, you can learn to systematically manage the environmental responsibilities that contribute to sustainability.
An EMS can provide value to the environment, your organization and interested parties. Consistent with your environmental policy, the benefits of an EMS include:
ISO 14019 is the global standard for validating and verifying sustainability information. It comes in two parts.
ISO 14019-1 specifies the general principles and requirements for sustainability information validation and verification. It covers reporting environmental, social and governance (ESG) and other sustainability elements, and determining the categorization of quantitative and qualitative information. These principles and requirements contribute to the rules and procedures provided in validation/verification programs.
The document can form the basis for validation and verification activities that support other conformity assessment schemes.
ISO 14019-2 specifies the verification process requirements for quantitative and qualitative sustainability information, including reporting ESG and other sustainability aspects. The standard applies to the rules and procedures for carrying out verification by providing elements of a verification program, such as process, evidence-gathering activities and reporting.
The document addresses uncertainty in values and how to address these uncertainties. It also addresses primary and secondary data sources and how they relate to the strength of verification evidence.
The benefits include:
A jurisdictional approach aims to advance shared sustainability goals in landscapes defined by subnational governments’ administrative boundaries. Implementation needs a lot of government involvement compared to a landscape approach.
A landscape approach is a place-based management approach that sees stakeholders collaborating in a landscape to advance shared sustainability goals and build resilience.
It aims to reconcile and optimize social, economic and environmental goals across numerous economic sectors and land uses. Implementation is through land-use plans, policies, initiatives, long-term investments and other means.
The Kyoto Protocol is an international treaty that initially saw 37 nations and the EU-15 commit to reducing their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions based on scientific consensus. The treaty was adopted in Kyoto, Japan, in 1997 and was implemented eight years later in 2005.
The Kyoto Protocol, which currently has 192 parties committed, set a precedent for countries to act on the climate emergency. Its main mission was to control emissions of the main human-caused GHGs.
Its first commitment period ended in 2012 when a second commitment period, called the Doha Amendment, was agreed.
Landfill is the method of disposing of rubbish, also known as trash and garbage, by burying it underground.
A landscape approach is a place-based management approach that sees stakeholders collaborating in a landscape to advance shared sustainability goals and build resilience.
It aims to reconcile and optimize social, economic and environmental goals across numerous economic sectors and land uses. Implementation is through land-use plans, policies, initiatives, long-term investments and other means.
A jurisdictional approach aims to advance shared sustainability goals in landscapes defined by subnational governments’ administrative boundaries. Implementation needs a lot of government involvement compared to a landscape approach.
Life cycle assessment (LCA) aims to measure the environmental impact of a product or service throughout its existence.
A localvore is a person who only consumes food cultivated locally.
Long-term science-based targets are accomplished when decarbonization reaches over 90%, compared to baseline emissions, to achieve net zero by 2050, with residual targets addressed with neutralization.
Loss and damage are climate change-related consequences that people cannot adapt to. This is either because the consequence is too severe or the impacted community cannot access the resources to adapt. Loss and damage result from sudden natural disasters, such as floods, or gradual change, such as desertification.
A low-carbon economy releases minimal carbon into the atmosphere. This usually means adopting low-carbon power sources over fossil fuels.
The Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) is a certification and eco-labeling program for sustainable seafood.
Materiality considers all aspects of a business that may affect opportunity and risk. Investors have conventionally focused on financial materiality because their primary interest has been the bottom line – profitability. But things are changing, investors and regulators are now interested in non-financial materiality.
Understanding a company’s environmental, social and governance (ESG) material risks has multiple advantages. It enables the reporting of non-financial issues to improve investment decisions and risk and opportunity assessment, enhancing stakeholder engagement and helping to future-proof a company against regulatory and legal changes.
A materiality assessment formally assesses stakeholders’ commitment to specific ESG issues and determines an organization’s ESG score. It identifies the impact of a certain issue on a company’s performance and market competitiveness.
Methane (CH₄) is a greenhouse gas (GHG) and its presence in the atmosphere affects our climate system and Earth’s temperature. It is a primary component of natural gas. Although carbon dioxide (CO₂) has a longer-lasting effect on our climate, CH₄ has a much greater global warming potential (GWP) than CO₂.
According to the Environmental Defense Fund, CH₄ accounts for at least a quarter of today’s global warming. Agriculture, principally through manure and gastroenteric releases, but also rice cultivation, is responsible for around 25% of CH₄ emissions, followed by the energy sector.
Microfinance is a source of financial services for individuals or small businesses without access to traditional banking services. It can be a sustainable way of alleviating poverty by empowering entrepreneurs to build businesses and support their families and communities.
Microgeneration, or micro-energy, is the ability to produce energy on a small scale, e.g. a single wind turbine or home solar panels.
Microplastics are pieces of plastic, usually less than 5 mm long, found on land and water due to plastic pollution.
The mitigation hierarchy states that decarbonization should always come before beyond value chain mitigation (BVCM) compensation and neutralization. Net zero is only achievable through deep emission cuts, at least 90% by 2050, after which residual emissions are addressed with neutralization.
Modern slavery encompasses many forms, such as human trafficking and people born into slavery. There are various definitions, but all include aspects of control, involuntary actions and exploitation.
A modern slave might face violence or threats, be forced into inescapable debt, or have their passport taken away and face deportation. Many people have fallen into this trap trying to escape poverty or insecurity, improve their lives and support their families. Now, they cannot leave.
Monocropping is the agricultural practice of growing a single crop on the same land year after year. This does not include rotation through other crops or growing multiple crops on the same land, also known as polyculture.
Naked packaging refers to products sold without any packaging.
A nationally determined contribution (NDC) is a non-binding national plan outlining climate change mitigation, including greenhouse gas (GHG) emission reductions. Such plans also include policies and measures governments seek to introduce in response to climate change and to contribute to the Paris Agreement’s global targets.
Natural capital is the world’s assets, such as soil, air, water and living things.
Natural resources are raw materials or substances direct from nature, such as minerals, wood, water and fertile land. It also refers to materials we harvest, utilize and rely on.
Nature-based solutions are inspired and supported by nature and may offer environmental, economic and social benefits while increasing resilience.
They can be actions to protect, conserve, restore, sustainably use and manage natural or modified terrestrial, freshwater, coastal and marine ecosystems. Such actions address social, economic and environmental challenges effectively and adaptively while providing human well-being, ecosystem services and resilience and biodiversity benefits.
Nature positive concerns behavior and actions that increase biodiversity and the number of species, rather than cause their decline.
Near-term science-based targets cover the next 5-10 years, halving emissions compared to a baseline year. This is the first reality check on an organization’s journey to net zero by 2050.
Negative screening aims to identify organizations that engage in bad practices, such as arms dealing and cigarette production.
Net zero, also net-zero, concerns the balance between emitting and absorbing carbon in the atmosphere. It ultimately means cutting greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions to as close to zero as possible, with remaining emissions reabsorbed from the atmosphere by forests and oceans, etc.
Net zero is achieved when an organization eliminates all possible carbon emissions and compensates for remaining emissions with beyond value chain mitigation (BVCM). The net-zero process begins with calculating scopes 1, 2 and 3, agreeing on science-based targets, developing decarbonization pathways until 2030 and gradually moving toward long-term carbon capture, storage and sequestration for emissions that cannot be decreased.
Net Zero Asset Managers (NZAM) is an international group of asset managers dedicated to supporting the net-zero emissions by 2050 (or sooner) goal, aligning with global efforts to limit warming to 1.5°C. It also supports investments aligned with net-zero emissions by 2050 (or sooner).
The net-zero water approach sees a building or community only use the water that falls on-site. Net-zero water aims to limit the consumption of water resources before returning it to the same source.
Neutralization, or carbon dioxide (CO₂) removal (CDR), concerns removing carbon from the atmosphere and its permanent storage. Projects include direct air capture (DAC) and bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS).
Nitrous oxide (N₂O), colloquially called laughing gas, contributes to the greenhouse effect.
Further to natural sources, agriculture and fertilizers produce N₂O. Around 40% of N₂O emissions globally come from human activities. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has calculated that N₂O comprises about 6% of all GHG emissions, and its emissions rose 30% in the past 40 years.
The EU’s Non-Financial Reporting Directive (NFRD), or Directive 2014/95/EU, outlines the regulation for larger companies around disclosing non-financial and diversity information. The directive helps investors, consumers, policymakers and others gauge a company’s non-financial performance.
The NFRD was a step in the right direction, but is largely considered inadequate and replaceable. The NFRD has been particularly criticized because it implies that environmental, social and governance (ESG) have no financial relevance.
The EU’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) entered into force on January 5, 2023, and will replace the NFRD.
Offsetting entails reducing or removing carbon dioxide (CO₂) or other greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions to compensate for emissions made elsewhere. Such action allows organizations and individuals to invest in quantifiable environmental projects to balance their carbon emissions. It is part of corporate sustainability strategies that aim to reach net zero when it complements a decarbonization strategy. Offsetting technologies include carbon capture and reforestation.
Organic is a blanket term for anything that is or was a living organism. It is also an item that does not use pesticides or fertilizers, or usually have genetically modified ingredients.
Ozone (O₃) is a pale blue gas with three oxygen atoms that is present in different layers of our atmosphere. Generally, O₃ is not emitted into the air directly, but develops at ground level through a chemical reaction.
Ozone layer depletion does not cause global warming, but it can harm human health. The Stock Resilience Centre defines it as one of Earth’s boundaries. According to NASA, ozone layer negative shifts are offset by positive changes in human behavior that allow the ozone layer to reform.
Packaging waste recovery notes (PRN) and packaging waste export recovery notes (PERN) are the only legal forms to demonstrate that a producer is conducting the required amount of recovery and recycling.
The Paris Agreement, or Paris Climate Agreement, is a legally binding, international climate change treaty. The aim is to limit global warming to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels (1850-1900), preferably below 1.5°C, by the end of the century. The agreement was adopted by 196 nations at the UN’s COP21 in Paris in 2015. It came into force in 2016.
The Paris Agreement requests participating countries to act to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. These commitments are called nationally determined contributions (NDCs). It covers climate change mitigation, adaptation and finance. Within the agreement, countries developed an enhanced transparency framework (ETF) to report transparently and track progress on the actions taken.
Plasma arc heating involves heating municipal solid waste to extreme temperatures (3,000-10,000°C) using a plasma arc. Energy is released by electrical discharge in an inert atmosphere. This converts the organic waste into hydrogen-rich gas and non-organic waste into an inert glassy residue.
A plug-in hybrid electric vehicle has a rechargeable battery that recharges when connected via a charging cable to an external electric power source, additional to internally by the vehicle’s ICE-powered generator. A hybrid vehicle is primarily powered by a conventional internal combustion engine (ICE) but supplemented with power from regenerative braking.
Positive screening seeks to monitor an organization’s ethical performance by the good that it does.
Post-consumer refers to something used by consumers before it is reprocessed into a new product.
Preservation tries to keep something the same by preventing it from being damaged.
Product stewardship sees companies take responsibility for the environmental impacts of the products they make, sell or buy. This involves all product life cycle stages, including end-of-life management.
Pyrolysis is the action of heating waste to high temperatures to break down carbon content. This is through the absence of air to a mixture of gaseous and liquid fuels and solid residue. One example is the conversion of wood to charcoal.
The Rainforest Alliance works to conserve biodiversity and ensure sustainable livelihoods by transforming land use, business practices and consumer behavior.
Rainwater harvesting sees stormwater that falls on buildings collected and stored for later use to avoid it going straight to the drainage system.
The most common systems concern:
Reclaimed is the action of refurbishing waste materials for new products.
Recyclable refers to a product or material that can be collected, processed and manufactured into a new product.
Recycling refers to collecting and processing waste materials, ideally to make new products. A common form is recycling aluminum cans, which are melted down and reshaped for different uses, rather than ending up in landfills. Recycling materials with toxic waste, such as electronics, is a little trickier.
Reducing happens when an organization or person reduces harmful habits that produce waste.
Reforestation is the action of planting trees where a forest was depleted for commercial purposes.
Regeneration concerns improving ecological health and biodiversity through enabling, supporting and enhancing natural processes.
Remanufacturing is about rebuilding a product to its original specifications using a mix of reused, repaired and new parts.
Remineralization aims to restore mineral content and resources to an environment.
Renewable energy is typically electricity derived from natural, replenishable sources, such as geothermal, hydropower, solar and wind. Non-renewable resources, such as coal, oil and groundwater, have limited quantities.
Responsible innovation prioritizes ethics and social responsibility in researching, designing and producing new technologies or evolutions of existing technologies. Responsible innovation suggests that ethics is a design problem.
Restoration is the act of assisting an ecosystem to recover to a previous, more biodiverse condition.
The Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) promotes best practices and guidelines to decrease emissions and provides target-setting methods based on climate science.
The SBTi helps companies set carbon-reduction goals compliant with Paris Agreement targets. The initiative is a collaboration between the CDP (originally the Carbon Disclosure Project), UN Global Compact, World Resources Institute (WRI) and World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF). It is one of the We Mean Business Coalition commitments.
Scope 1-3 emissions are terms developed by the Greenhouse Gas Protocol (GHG Protocol). The levels allow organizations to categorize their emissions. Scope 3 has the most difficult emissions to track.
Scope 1 emissions are direct greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions released into the atmosphere from company-owned and controlled resources. Examples include on-site manufacturing and combustion, organization-owned fossil-fuel power plants and company fleet emissions.
Scope 2 emissions are indirect greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions released into the atmosphere from purchased energy from a utility provider. They include all GHG emissions from consuming purchased electricity, steam, heat and cooling. Investing in renewable energy sources could lower these emissions.
Scope 3 emissions, or value chain emissions, are indirect emissions from the reporting company’s upstream and downstream supply chain. There are 15 categories, including business travel, waste disposal and purchased goods and services.
Scope 4 emissions, commonly referred to as “avoided emissions”, are greenhouse gas (GHG) reductions occurring outside a product’s life cycle or value chain, but directly using that product.
Coined by the World Resources Institute (WRI) in 2013, the term extends carbon accounting’s scope beyond the direct and indirect emissions from operations (covered by scope 1-3) to include the positive impacts of products and services in reducing emissions elsewhere. For example, if an organization produces an energy-efficient appliance, emissions saved by consumer use, instead of a less efficient model, would fall under scope 4.
Secondary recovered fuel involves recovering energy from waste that cannot realistically be reused or recycled from mechanical and biological treatment processes.
Shared value is a management principle that seeks market opportunities for organizations to solve social problems. “Creating shared value” was first introduced in the Harvard Business Review in 2011, based on the principle that a company’s competitiveness and the health of its related communities are mutually dependent.
A sharing economy is a system whereby consumers share access to products or services, rather than having individual ownership. Examples include Airbnb, which matches people with a place or space to rent with those looking for a place to stay.
Sin stocks are investments associated with unethical or immoral activities according to an investor’s personal opinions. Activities may include alcohol, gambling, tobacco or adult entertainment.
Single use, sometimes single-use, refers to something, such as a product, that can only be used once before discarding.
A social bond sees proceeds specifically fund new and existing projects with social benefits like affordable housing and healthcare.
Social capital is the combined value of all social networks, the societal links and shared values enabling individuals and groups to work together.
A social enterprise is a for-profit organization with a core business model linked to a social cause. Profits are often reinvested into the business or related communities. Examples of causes include tackling social problems and improving communities and the environment.
Solar energy is energy derived from the Sun. Solar panels absorb the Sun’s radiation. This energy is captured, stored and regenerated into the electricity grid.
Solar panels cover two areas of generation:
The Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) was created by the Financial Stability Board (FSB) in 2015 to improve and increase reporting on climate-related financial information. Following the TCFD’s 2023 Status Report, upon FSB’s request, the TCFD was disbanded.
Thematic investing is the practice of investing in organizations that align with a particular investment theme, such as renewable energy, education or healthcare innovations.
A climate tipping point occurs when a slight change triggers a strongly nonlinear response in the internal dynamics of part of the climate system, qualitatively changing its future state.
Human-induced climate change could push several larger elements past their respective tipping points. Such elements include the Atlantic thermohaline circulation (THC), West Antarctic ice sheet, Greenland ice sheet, Amazon rainforest, boreal forests, West African monsoon, Indian summer monsoon and El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO).
Traceability is the ability to trace all processes, from procuring raw materials and production to consumption and disposal, to clarify when and where a product was produced and by whom.
A transition plan is a time-bound plan clearly outlining how an organization will achieve its strategy to pivot its existing assets, operations and business model to align with the latest and most ambitious climate science recommendations.
The triple bottom line (TBL), coined by famous British management consultant John Elkington in 1994, describes companies’ separate but interdependent financial, social and environmental “bottom lines”.
It sees a business prioritize people, the planet and profit equally. Such businesses may encourage proper healthcare, health and well-being, emphasize sustainable practices in operations and tie in social causes. These companies also retain profits and perfectly show how business and the environment can work together.
The UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) created an international environmental treaty to combat “dangerous human interference with the climate system”, partially through stabilizing greenhouse gases (GHGs) in the atmosphere. The treaty was signed by 154 nations during the UN Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED), also known as the Earth Summit, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It came into force in 1994.
The Kyoto Protocol was the first implementation of measures under the UNFCCC. This protocol was substituted by the Paris Agreement, which came into effect in 2016.
The UN Global Compact is a voluntary pact that promotes responsible business through 10 universally accepted principles and encourages action that advances broader societal goals, such as the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
The UN Principles for Responsible Investing (PRI) contains six principles under which asset owners and managers voluntarily commit to incorporating environmental, social and governance (ESG) issues into investment processes, active ownership and reporting, and promotes responsible investing across the industry.
The UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) provide “a shared blueprint for peace and prosperity for people and the planet, now and into the future.” Established in 2015, the 17 SDGs are an urgent call for action by all UN member states and are intended to be accomplished by 2030.
The SDGs form the framework for improving the lives of populations around the world and mitigating the hazardous human effects of climate change. The SDGs are:
The UN’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) is a milestone document in the history of human rights that defines the rights and freedoms of all people. Following World War II, the UN General Assembly adopted the UDHR on December 10, 1948, in Paris, France. It was drafted by representatives with various legal and cultural backgrounds.
Value chain emissions, also known as scope 3 emissions, are the most significant part of many companies’ corporate carbon footprint (CCF). The Greenhouse Gas Protocol (GHG Protocol) separates scope 3 emissions into 15 categories, including business travel, waste disposal and purchased goods and services. Of course, not every category is relevant to each company.
A value proposition considers the consumer. The consumer value is derived from a product, service or organization. For example, using recycled materials is a value proposition for climate-conscious consumers.
Vegan is a diet and lifestyle that avoids all animal-derived products.
Voluntary emission reductions (VER) are made voluntarily without mandate. They usually originate from an organization’s will to proactively tackle climate change. The voluntary market functions outside the compliance market. Organizations and individuals wishing to offset with no regulatory obligation can use VER. The carbon credits from VER cannot be used to meet Kyoto Protocol-stated governmental compliance measures.
The Voluntary Sustainability Reporting Standard for Non-Listed SMEs (VSME) is for unlisted micro, small and medium-sized enterprises that face increasing environmental, social and governance (ESG) reporting requirements and are being challenged to meet business partner, financial institution and investor expectations. The VSME is a proportional alternative to the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD).
The benefits are diverse and include:
A waste stream is the complete flow of a specific domestic or industrial waste type through to recovery, recycling or disposal.
A water footprint is the total volume of freshwater used to produce goods and services consumed by an individual, community, nation or the planet.
Water scarcity happens when all demands for water supply or quality cannot be met.
Water security involves providing safe access to adequate water quantity and quality for sustaining humans, protecting ecosystems and socioeconomic development. This helps prevent waterborne pollution and related disasters, as well as preserve ecosystems in a climate of peace and political stability (from UN Water). Decreased water security is a result of climate change.
Water self-sufficiency is the ratio of the internal water footprint to the country’s total water footprint. It indicates the national capability of supplying the water needed for producing the domestic demand for goods and services.
Weather concerns the atmosphere’s state at a particular place and time, including pressure, temperature, wind, humidity, rainfall and cloud cover. Weather differs from climate, which is all weather conditions for a particular location averaged over about 30 years.
Whitewashing is when an organization covers up or glosses over scandalous information by subjectively representing information.
Wind energy comes from wind turbines. This renewable energy has grown in popularity, although it is not perfect because turbines are clunky, require tons of precious metal and hurt surrounding wildlife. That said, this clean energy is abundant and improvements are being made.
Wish-cycling is an aspirational approach to recycling without knowing if the material is recyclable, but expecting it to be properly dealt with.
Zero carbon means that a product or service produces no carbon emissions. Renewables like wind and solar are considered zero carbon because they do not emit carbon when producing electricity. Where net zero refers to canceling or balancing carbon an organization produces, zero carbon refers to a product or service emitting no carbon dioxide equivalent (CO₂e). Net zero also means an activity releases net-zero carbon emissions into the atmosphere.
Zero waste refers to eliminating waste, not consuming new or recovering resources, and keeping products out of landfills and incinerators or being left on the ground/discarded in nature. The concept concerns managing products, packaging and materials responsibly to minimize environmental harm. Minimal waste is a more realistic expression because it is impossible to create zero waste.
AccountAbility’s (AA) AA1000 Assurance Standard is one of the dominant environmental, social and governance (ESG) assurance standards. Adopting AA1000 avoids the need to expend resources on creating tailored guidelines. The framework’s flexibility enables it to be adopted by businesses of all sizes and industries – its scope can be customized to your company’s needs.
AA1000 was founded on the principles of:
AA1000 emphasizes the need for organizations to engage effectively with stakeholders, identify material sustainability issues and demonstrate the existence of a responsible business strategy.
We can support you through the process, enabling you to enhance trust, reputation, stakeholder attraction and, when tied to financial lending, reduce capital costs.
An absolute target is defined by the reduction in absolute emissions over time.
Active ownership is a responsible investing method that influences an organization’s decisions and actions by engaging with the organization as a shareholder. It involves using the rights and position of ownership to impact investee companies’ activities or behaviors. Active ownership can be applied differently per asset class but, for listed entities, it involves engagement and voting activities.
Active transport means traveling via a physical activity like walking, cycling, running, skateboarding or scooting.
Adaptive capacity refers to the ability of systems, institutions, humans and other organisms to adjust to potential damage to seize opportunities or respond to consequences.
Afforestation sees new forests planted on lands that have never contained forests.
Agflation concerns the increase in food prices due to heightened demand for food for human consumption and energy.
Agrichar is a black carbon byproduct of pyrolysis. Some suggest that it can improve soil’s ability to store carbon.
Air pollution is the contamination of the environment by any physical, chemical or biological agent that changes natural atmospheric characteristics. Air pollution and its impact on air quality are linked to our climate and ecosystems. Many air pollution drivers, such as burning fossil fuels, also emit carbon.
An air quality index (AQI) highlights a specific area or country’s air contamination or expected pollution levels. It is a combination of pollution types. Different nations have their own AQIs corresponding to other air quality standards.
Alternative energy has two categories:
Alternative energy sources are vital to climate mitigation.
Anaerobic digestion is the natural process of decomposition and decay, where organic material breaks down into simpler chemical components under anaerobic conditions, i.e. without oxygen.
The atmosphere is the layer of gases that envelopes the Earth. The atmosphere comprises nitrogen (about 80%), oxygen (about 20%), argon (about 1%), carbon dioxide (0.05%) and trace gases, including neon, helium, methane and krypton.
Avoided emissions quantify the emissions saved by products and services that can substitute high-carbon activities with low-carbon options. For example, replacing fossil-fuel power generation with wind or solar decreases economy-wide emissions.
The base year is the date chosen as the starting point against which emissions are tracked over time.
Base year emissions refer to the volume of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions generated in the base year.
Base year emissions recalculation concerns recalculating emissions in the base year due to a change in the organization or accounting methodology that determines the emissions level to ensure data consistency over time.
Best-in-class refers to an entity, such as an organization or country, that leads in sustainability practices and performance.
Beyond value chain mitigation (BVCM) refers to measures to prevent, decrease or eliminate greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions outside their value chain. Compensation and neutralization can be considered BVCM and additional to decarbonization, rather than its substitute.
Biodegradable is something that decays into its basic components and blends into the Earth without harming the environment. No toxins are left behind.
Biodegradable municipal waste (BMW) degrades and is better known as rubbish, garbage or trash.
Biodiesel is a renewable fuel for diesel engines. It comes from natural oils, such as soybean oil.
Biodiversity concerns the diversity of flora and fauna on Earth. Human-caused environmental damage reduces biodiversity. Creating a healthy, sustainable society requires increasing biodiversity.
Bioethanol is a substitute for gasoline/petrol. It comes from cereal-based crops, such as wheat, maize (corn) and sugarcane.
Biofuels are fuels that come from biological sources, such as crops, new and used vegetable oils, animal fats and various waste. They can complement or replace traditional fossil fuels. However, each biofuel’s greenhouse gas (GHG) mitigation potential can vary considerably.
Biomass, or biogas, is a substitute for natural gas. It is the biodegradable part of waste, products and residues from different industries like agriculture, forestry, aquaculture and fisheries. Biomass can be converted into electricity, burned to create heat or processed into biofuels. Because it is a fuel, some people use biomass and biofuel interchangeably. Biomass is a renewable organic material.
Plant-, wood- and other bio-waste are the most common biomass types used for energy. Biomass is a solid material that can be turned into biogas, mainly methane (CH₄), through microorganisms when there is no oxygen, also known as anaerobic digestion.
Biomimicry is a design that seeks sustainable solutions by mimicking nature. The aim is to create products and services that adapt to life on Earth over the long term.
Biophilia is the love of life, living and the affinity for living things.
Blackwater is contaminated wastewater that must be drained from a building into blackwater pipes to avoid mixing with graywater.
A blue economy involves economic activities that create sustainable wealth from the oceans and coasts.
Bluewater, or blue water, refers to surface and groundwater.
Bluewashing happens when an organization overstates its commitment to responsible social practices or hides information on its socially damaging practices.
A business model is a plan for successfully operating a business, identifying revenue sources, customer base, products and financing. Sustainability factors like social causes can be incorporated, too.
Business resilience is an organization’s ability to adapt in a changing environment to enable it to achieve objectives and prosper.
Business sustainability, or corporate sustainability, refers to ethically and responsibly managing an organization’s continued success with environmental, social and financial concerns.
Business transformation is about making bold and fundamental changes to business operations, rather than incremental changes to the status quo.
Byproduct means excess materials produced. Companies will try to limit their byproducts for sustainability and financial reasons.
Carbon (C) is an element essential to life on Earth. It makes up the fats and carbohydrates of food and is part of molecules, such as DNA and protein, that make up our bodies.
Carbon accounting, also known as greenhouse gas (GHG) accounting, includes systematic methodologies, measurement and monitoring to evaluate and quantify an entity or activity’s carbon dioxide equivalent (CO₂e).
Carbon accounting can measure all GHG emissions, such as carbon dioxide (CO₂), methane (CH₄), nitrous oxide (N₂O) and fluorinated gases (F-gases). Gases, besides carbon, are expressed as carbon equivalents. It is a popular way for governments, businesses and individuals to assess and report their climate impact. The benefits include maintaining compliance, minimizing risk, enhancing brand equity and reducing inefficiency.
Importantly, carbon, or more specifically CO₂, is the main GHG resulting from human activities, but it is not the only one. Carbon is sometimes used inaccurately to describe all GHG activities.
The EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) places a carbon price on imports of products from countries with less ambitious national climate change policies. Proposed by the European Commission in 2021, the system aims to prevent carbon leakage. Part of the European Green Deal, the CBAM is expected to come into force in 2026.
The carbon budget is the amount of greenhouse gases (GHGs) that humanity can emit into the atmosphere by the end of this century and still limit the global temperature increase compared to pre-industrial levels (1850-1900).
According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the atmosphere can absorb, calculated from the beginning of 2020, no more than 400 gigatons of carbon dioxide (CO₂) if we are to stay below the Paris Agreement’s 1.5°C threshold. The carbon budget concerns an almost linear relationship between cumulative emissions and temperature rise.
Carbon capture and storage (CCS) involves capturing carbon dioxide (CO₂) from chemical or biomass power plants and storing it to reduce CO₂ emissions. The technologies involved include forestry and air-filtering machinery that capture airborne CO₂. Innovative compensation efforts often include CCS mechanisms.
A carbon credit is a tradable certificate or permit that incentivizes a company to reduce its emissions. When organizations create carbon offsetting initiatives, they receive a transferable or tradeable carbon credit or token. A credit allows the company to emit greenhouse gases (GHGs) and compensate for this elsewhere. A credit represents one ton of carbon dioxide (CO₂) reduced or removed from the atmosphere.
A company sets an emissions cap, which is reduced periodically. If a company exceeds this limit, it is fined. Unused certificates can be sold to other companies. The certificates are a market-oriented mechanism for decreasing GHG emissions. The number of available credits is reduced over time to reduce GHGs. In practice, these credits let owners reduce GHG emissions to get closer to net zero.
The term also refers to purchased credits that fund emission-reducing projects.
The carbon cycle includes the processes in which carbon (C) atoms circulate through Earth’s land, ocean, atmosphere and interior.
Carbon dioxide (CO₂) is a colorless, odorless gas comprising one part carbon and two parts oxygen. It is a natural component of Earth’s atmosphere and is one of the most common greenhouse gases (GHGs).
CO₂ is released through human activities, such as burning fossil fuels and deforestation, as well as natural processes. Because humans release more CO₂ into the atmosphere than current biological processes remove, the CO₂ level in the atmosphere and oceans increases annually. Other GHGs include methane (CH₄), nitrous oxide (N₂O) and fluorinated gases (F-gases).
Carbon dioxide equivalent (CO₂e) is a single-unit metric to harmonize emissions from different greenhouse gases (GHGs) based on their global warming potential (GWP).
In GHG accounting, CO₂e is more accurate than CO₂ alone, as it covers the GWPs of all GHGs that capture heat and warm Earth’s atmosphere.
Carbon emissions, or greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, are the carbon dioxide (CO₂) emissions released into the atmosphere. CO₂ is the primary GHG emitted from human activities.
A carbon footprint measures the total greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, in carbon equivalents, produced by an individual, practice, product, organization or nation-state’s activities over time.
Carbon footprint verification (CFV) aims to verify an organization’s carbon footprint. An organization must collect data on emissions caused by its activities, products and services. Once collected, an independent body, such as SGS, can verify the data accuracy and organization’s carbon footprint to help the organization understand the level of emissions it needs to reduce and/or offset to become carbon neutral.
CFV is essential to providing credibility and reassuring stakeholders that the organization’s carbon footprint is accurate, absolute and compliant with major greenhouse gas (GHG) reporting standards.
Carbon insetting seeks to reduce an organization’s emissions and carbon footprint within its supply chain or industry. The strategy involves investing in nature-based solutions, such as reforestation, agroforestry, renewable energy and regenerative agriculture. These aim to sequester carbon and create positive impacts for communities, landscapes and ecosystems linked to the company’s value chain.
Carbon intensity refers to a group, individual, organization or country’s carbon emissions per unit of economic activity. Example include sales, gross domestic product (GDP) or power generation.
Carbon labeling concerns the amount of embedded carbon in a product.
Carbon leakage refers to an organization relocating its activities to countries with weaker carbon and sustainability legislation. This can see the organization’s carbon footprint rise due to more ability to pollute and the environmental costs of transportation.
Relocating to less regulated countries can also create inaccurate carbon measurements, skewing the carbon emissions mapping and attribution. The risk of carbon leakage may be higher in energy-intensive industries.
A carbon market is a voluntary or legally operated system that enables carbon credit trading between private and public entities. Carbon markets take many forms, such as cap-and-trade systems or carbon taxes, but the main principle remains – use market power to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and mitigate the effects of climate change.
The aim is to create an economic incentive for companies to reduce their emissions, as they can sell unused allowances to others who need them. The Kyoto Protocol defined the first carbon market, creating three mechanisms to achieve emissions reductions:
Carbon negative is attained when a company’s activities go beyond achieving net-zero carbon emissions by removing additional carbon dioxide (CO₂) from the atmosphere.
Carbon neutral is a condition in which, during a specified period, the carbon footprint has been reduced due to greenhouse gas (GHG) emission reductions or removal enhancements and, if greater than zero, is then counterbalanced by offsetting.
Carbon offsetting, or compensation, is the voluntary or mandatory purchase of carbon credits to balance an entity’s emissions. The price of a carbon credit used for compensation is the benchmark when comparing an investment for direct internal reductions.
Some greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions are impossible to avoid, and compensation through carbon credits helps achieve climate neutrality and net-zero objectives. Compensation includes investing in renewables, energy efficiency, reforestation, carbon capture and carbon storage through planting trees or restoring lands.
Carbon positive, also known as climate positive, is used by companies to announce their move beyond carbon neutrality by reducing/removing more greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions than they are generating.
Carbon pricing assigns a cost to emitting carbon dioxide (CO₂) into the atmosphere, usually via a fee per ton of CO₂ emitted, or limiting total emissions organizations can produce and issuing permits. Placing a cost on emissions is considered the most efficient way to encourage entities to decrease their emissions.
The Carbon Reduction Commitment (CRC) scheme applies mandatory emissions trading to cut carbon emissions from large commercial and public sector organizations.
Decarbonization concerns removing or reducing all human-made carbon emissions in the atmosphere. It is achieved through cross-cutting measures to decrease or eliminate carbon emissions from an organization or individual’s activities.
Decarbonization differs from climate neutrality because it aims to reduce absolute carbon emissions and intensity. Climate neutrality does not necessarily include decarbonization, as climate neutrality can be achieved solely through buying carbon credits.
Decentralized energy (DE) sees energy produced on a local scale, away from a conventional large-scale power plant production process.
Deforestation is the process of harvesting forests for natural resources or to clear land for agriculture or construction. This harms the environment because the converted land usually emits carbon and, with fewer trees, is less capable of absorbing carbon dioxide (CO₂). Deforestation that happens faster than forests are able to recover causes environmental damage, such as biodiversity loss and climate change.
A digital carbon footprint is the amount of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions digital devices, tools and platforms produce. All technology, such as cloud computing, mobile phones and internet use, produce a digital carbon footprint.
Digital sobriety aims to limit the harmful environmental impact of smartphones, internet use, digital media and other technologies daily. Moving toward sobriety includes actions like buying fewer devices and lower-power machines, deleting emails, choosing lower-definition media consumption and sustainably developing software.
Direct emissions, or direct greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, come from sources owned, produced and controlled by an organization. These are scope 1 emissions, according to the Greenhouse Gas Protocol (GHG Protocol). To note, indirect emissions are the consequence of the reporting organization’s activities, but are controlled or produced by another business.
Disclosure, such as environmental, social and governance (ESG) disclosures and reports, sees an organization evaluate and disclose its ESG-related data covering business operations, opportunities and risks. Organizations measure and disclose risks using a selected sustainability framework or frameworks. Capital markets and purchasing organizations use such data to inform decisions.
Carbon dioxide (CO₂) is a colorless, odorless gas comprising one part carbon and two parts oxygen. It is a natural component of Earth’s atmosphere and is one of the most common greenhouse gases (GHGs).
CO₂ is released through human activities, such as burning fossil fuels and deforestation, as well as natural processes. Because humans release more CO₂ into the atmosphere than current biological processes remove, the CO₂ level in the atmosphere and oceans increases annually. Other GHGs include methane (CH₄), nitrous oxide (N₂O) and fluorinated gases (F-gases).
Carbon dioxide equivalent (CO₂e) is a single-unit metric to harmonize emissions from different greenhouse gases (GHGs) based on their global warming potential (GWP).
In GHG accounting, CO₂e is more accurate than CO₂ alone, as it covers the GWPs of all GHGs that capture heat and warm Earth’s atmosphere.
Carbon emissions, or greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, are the carbon dioxide (CO₂) emissions released into the atmosphere. CO₂ is the primary GHG emitted from human activities.
A carbon footprint measures the total greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, in carbon equivalents, produced by an individual, practice, product, organization or nation-state’s activities over time.
Carbon footprint verification (CFV) aims to verify an organization’s carbon footprint. An organization must collect data on emissions caused by its activities, products and services. Once collected, an independent body, such as SGS, can verify the data accuracy and organization’s carbon footprint to help the organization understand the level of emissions it needs to reduce and/or offset to become carbon neutral.
CFV is essential to providing credibility and reassuring stakeholders that the organization’s carbon footprint is accurate, absolute and compliant with major greenhouse gas (GHG) reporting standards.
Eco-conscious is the mentality of focusing on reducing environmental impacts wherever possible.
An eco-district is a collaborative planning approach focusing on regenerative urban development at the neighborhood level.
An eco-footprint is the area of natural resources a human population requires to produce the products it consumes and to absorb its waste.
Eco-friendly generally concerns environmentally minded actions that cause minimal harm to the Earth. When it comes to marketing and green marketing, using “eco-friendly” is best avoided, as it is vague and fluid, and can impact your business. See our Greenwashing definition.
Your ecological footprint measures how much natural resources you use daily and the land your lifestyle requires. A person or community’s environmental impact is the amount of land needed to sustain its use of natural resources.
Ecological restoration is the complex process of artificially restoring an ecosystem to its original form. However, research suggests that once an ecosystem is damaged, it is almost impossible to restore it to its original form. That said, ecological restoration is still a crucial process.
An electric vehicle, or EV, runs on electricity powered by a rechargeable battery.
Electronic waste, or e-waste, concerns electronics at or close to the end of their useful lives. Green technology and sustainability approaches aim to extend the useful life of devices, using circular economy features to minimize e-waste. The priority is to reduce waste before refurbishing devices and moving toward recycling.
Embedded carbon, or embodied carbon, describes how the carbon footprint of a product (CFP), as measured by a full life cycle assessment, is usually measured in kilogram of carbon dioxide equivalent (kgCO₂e) per kg of material.
Embedded water, which has numerous different names, concerns the amount of water used to produce a good end to end.
Emissions, or emissions to air, are all the gases, including pollutants, greenhouse gases (GHGs) and other substances, that could potentially impact air quality and contribute to environmental changes. Since industrialization, human activities have significantly transformed our atmosphere’s chemical composition through greenhouse gas (GHG) and substance release.
Energy efficiency involves using the lowest amount of energy possible to provide power. It aims to see the same task or result achieved with less energy.
Environmental justice aims to treat all people, regardless of race, color, nationality or income, fairly regarding environmental laws, regulations and policies. The approach states that no group should have a disproportionate share of negative environmental consequences.
Environmental management systems include processes and practices that enable an organization to reduce its environmental impact. The most common framework is ISO 14001 – environmental management systems.
Environmental, social and governance (ESG) uses standard criteria to evaluate and demonstrate an organization’s sustainability performance and success.
Stakeholders expect organizations to not only deliver financial performance but also positively contribute to society:
ESG is the basis for numerous regulations, such as the Non-Financial Reporting Directive (NFRD), Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR).
The growing interest in measuring and ranking ESG by investors and businesses reflects the perspective that ESG should be factored in when considering business success.
The Fairtrade Foundation provides principles, including better prices, safe working conditions, local sustainability and fair terms of trade for farmers and workers.
The FAIRTRADE mark is used on products certified against internationally recognized Fairtrade standards.
A feed-in tariff is a policy to accelerate renewable energy investments. It usually involves long-term government contracts to ensure a fixed price for renewable energy generation to incentivize investments in renewables.
Food miles refers to the distance food is transported, from its preparation to reaching the consumer. Food miles is one factor considered when determining the environmental impact of food.
Forest degradation sees a forest deteriorate so it no longer supports people and wildlife, for example, by filtering air for breathing and water for drinking, and providing animals with food and homes.
The main cause of forest degradation is unsustainable and illegal logging. Climate change, particularly higher temperatures and unpredictable weather patterns, also increases the risk and severity of forest fires, disease and pest infestation.
A forest risk commodity is a material derived from forests or woodland used for production and sees forests converted for agricultural use.
The seven commodities responsible for most agricultural deforestation are:
The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) is an independent, non-governmental, not-for-profit organization established to respond to global deforestation concerns.
It provides internationally recognized standards setting, trademark assurance and accreditation for organizations and communities interested in responsible forestry.
Fossil fuels, such as coal, oil and natural gas, are materials formed naturally in the Earth’s crust from dead plants and animals over millennia. They are extracted and mainly used for fuel.
According to the UN, over 80% of carbon dioxide (CO₂) generated by humans comes from burning fossil fuels.
Their extraction, combustion and emissions negatively affect the carbon cycle that, in balanced states, allows climate stability and a functioning biosphere.
Freecycle is the act of exchanging goods to extend their life cycle and keep reusable items out of landfills.
The gender pay gap concerns equality and indicates the difference between men and women’s average or median earnings.
Geothermal energy is a renewable energy source derived from hot water or steam within the Earth that typically creates electricity.
According to earth science, the global surface temperature is calculated by averaging the temperature at the surface of the sea and air temperature over land.
In technical writing, scientists call long-term changes in GST global cooling or global warming. Periods of both have happened regularly throughout Earth’s history.
The global average temperature has warmed by 1.09°C (range 0.95-1.20°C) from 1850-1900 to 2011-2020.
Global warming is the gradual heating of Earth’s surface due to trapped greenhouse gases (GHGs) from human activities, mainly burning fossil fuels, that increase heat-trapping GHG levels in the atmosphere. This is observed since the pre-industrial period (1850-1900).
The phenomenon has always occurred, but we are primarily concerned with human-caused (anthropogenic) global warming. This defines how human behavior impacts the speed and intensity of the planet’s heating.
Climate change includes warming and its side effects, such as melting glaciers and more frequent droughts.
The global warming potential (GWP) index helps measure the relative warming effects of greenhouse gases (GHGs), using carbon dioxide (CO₂) as the baseline and harmonizing all gases as CO₂ equivalents.
Due to these gases’ differing lifetime effects, e.g. methane (CH₄) dissipates quicker than CO₂, the appropriate time horizon is crucial.
Green means behavior, products, policies and people, etc., that minimize environmental change.
Green bonds raise finances for environmentally sustainable or climate-related investments. They are like traditional bonds because they pay interest to investors. However, proceeds from their sale are specifically reserved for projects with positive environmental impacts.
They are usually issued with the same credit rating as the issuer’s traditional bonds, and the maturity, coupon and other terms are like those of other bonds. However, green bonds might have additional features, such as the use of proceeds, to ensure funds are for a specific environmental project.
Green bonds are subject to independent review and certification to ensure proceeds are going to eligible green projects.
The demand for green bonds has grown in recent years, as investor interest in environmentally friendly investments increases. Green bonds help finance renewable energy, energy efficiency, sustainable transportation and water treatment plants, among others. They also help raise awareness, encourage investment in environmental projects and help align financial markets with Paris Agreement goals.
A green building is based on ecological principles to maintain a healthy structure that minimizes environmental impacts. Crucial features include decreasing or eliminating adverse ecological effects while creating positive developments.
The green cloud concerns the possible environmental benefits for IT services stored or transferred over the internet. Considered a buzzword, the alleged benefits could enable technologists to feel that further efforts to reduce carbon footprints are unnecessary.
Green computing is a sustainable approach to using computers, devices and equipment. Examples include reducing resource use, responsibly disposing of e-waste and deploying energy-efficient IT equipment.
Green hushing refers to companies intentionally hiding sustainability goals. Reasons include the fear of greenwashing accusations or falling short of stated goals.
Green IT is the practice of designing, manufacturing, operating and disposing of IT products and devices to minimize the negative effects of operations on the environment.
Green marketing highlights a product or service and a company’s environmental credentials, but there is a fine line between green marketing and greenwashing.
Green marketing is when organizations sell products or services, or produce environmental, social and governance (ESG) reports, based on genuine environmental positives and data. This is enhanced by third-party verification.
Green marketing is considered honest and transparent, and meets several criteria:
Beware – if green marketing is based on falsehoods or does not meet sustainable business practice standards, the organization could be accused of greenwashing and receive hefty penalties, negative press and reputational damage.
Green premium was coined by Bill Gates. It refers to the economic and environmental costs of choosing clean technology over financially sound options with higher greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
Green software is applications designed, developed and implemented to minimize energy consumption and environmental effects.
The greenhouse effect happens when naturally occurring greenhouse gases (GHGs), such as carbon dioxide (CO₂), methane (CH₄), nitrogen oxide (N₂O) and fluorinated gases (HFCs), build up in the Earth’s atmosphere. This traps the Sun’s heat as it reflects from the Earth’s surface, warming the planet and increasing global temperatures.
Without the natural greenhouse effect, the global mean temperature would be -18°C, therefore uninhabitable for humans. Humans amplify the natural greenhouse effect by releasing GHGs when burning fossil fuels like coal, oil and gas.
High emitters are organizations or countries that emit comparatively high greenhouse gas (GHG) volumes. Per capita emissions are used to measure national emissions.
Human capital management (HCM) covers practices and tools to attract, recruit, train, develop, manage and retain staff to achieve business goals. Organizations that depend on staff to achieve goals allocate resources to develop the employee skills needed to deliver results.
Human rights are basic rights that should belong to all people. They include the right to life, liberty, free speech and freedom from slavery. The UN’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) is seen as the benchmark for these basic rights.
A hybrid vehicle is primarily powered by a conventional internal combustion engine (ICE) but supplemented with power from regenerative braking.
A plug-in hybrid electric vehicle has a rechargeable battery that recharges when connected via a charging cable to an external electric power source, additional to internally by the vehicle’s ICE-powered generator.
Hydrogen (H2) is the most abundant element in the universe. The Sun and stars are comprised mainly of hydrogen. It is a very light, colorless, odorless and tasteless gas, and can be an energy source.
It makes up less than 2% of current energy consumption in Europe and is mostly used for developing complex chemical products.
Hydrogen, when used as a fuel, produces only water and is an important element of the EU’s Energy System Integration Strategy.
Impact investing, or socially responsible investing, concerns investments made to try to generate positive, measurable social and environmental impacts, alongside a financial return.
Impact investments can be made in emerging and developed markets, and target a range of returns, from below market to market rate, depending on the investor’s strategic goals.
The growing impact investment market provides capital to address the world’s most pressing challenges in sectors, such as sustainable agriculture, renewable energy, conservation, microfinance and affordable and accessible basic services like housing, healthcare and education.
Impact measurement refers to measuring how organizations’ activities affect the world, positively and negatively.
An impact sourcing strategy directs employment and career development opportunities toward people from economically disadvantaged backgrounds.
Incineration, or direct combustion, involves the controlled burning of municipal solid waste to reduce waste volume and produce energy.
The Greenhouse Gas Protocol (GHG Protocol) describes indirect emissions as scope 2 and 3 emissions. They are a consequence of an organization’s activities but are owned or controlled by another entity. Indirect emissions examples include purchased electricity, waste disposal and business travel.
Integrated reporting is an approach to corporate reporting that integrates financial and non-financial information, such as sustainability data, into a single document showing a company’s performance.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is a UN body for researching and advancing human-induced climate change knowledge. Established in 1988, the body comprises 195 member states and is headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland.
The IPCC assembles comprehensive assessment reports concerning the state of “scientific, technical and socioeconomic knowledge on climate change.” Each report has directly powered international climate change policymaking.
In 2007, the IPCC and former US Vice President Al Gore jointly received the Nobel Peace Prize “for their efforts to build up and disseminate greater knowledge about man-made climate change, and to lay the foundations for the measures that are needed to counteract such change.”
Internal carbon pricing is a corporate financial strategy where a business assigns a monetary value to its carbon emissions, usually as a price per ton of carbon dioxide (CO₂) emitted. This internal price guides decision-making across the organization, encouraging investments in cleaner, more efficient technologies and practices.
Internal carbon pricing helps organizations internalize the external costs of their carbon emissions, aligning business operations with broader sustainability goals and regulatory environments. This facilitates the reduction of a company’s carbon footprint and incentivizes innovation in low-carbon technologies.
The International Standard on Assurance Engagements 3000 (ISAE 3000) is one of the dominant environmental, social and governance (ESG) assurance standards. ISAE 3000 underscores the importance of data quality, reporting procedures, controls and evidence-gathering processes.
Reasonable assurance engagements
The assurance provider must obtain sufficient evidence to form an opinion, like that of a financial statement audit. The assurance provider expresses an opinion, such as whether the sustainability report is complete and accurate, based on the identified criteria.
Limited assurance engagements
The assurance provider must obtain a meaningful level of assurance to form a conclusion, expressed as negative assurance in the assurance report.
ISO 14001 applies to all organizations and the environmental aspects of their activities, products and services that can control or influence, from a life-cycle perspective. The standard specifies environmental management system (EMS) requirements to enhance your organization’s environmental performance. With ISO 14001, you can learn to systematically manage the environmental responsibilities that contribute to sustainability.
An EMS can provide value to the environment, your organization and interested parties. Consistent with your environmental policy, the benefits of an EMS include:
ISO 14019 is the global standard for validating and verifying sustainability information. It comes in two parts.
ISO 14019-1 specifies the general principles and requirements for sustainability information validation and verification. It covers reporting environmental, social and governance (ESG) and other sustainability elements, and determining the categorization of quantitative and qualitative information. These principles and requirements contribute to the rules and procedures provided in validation/verification programs.
The document can form the basis for validation and verification activities that support other conformity assessment schemes.
ISO 14019-2 specifies the verification process requirements for quantitative and qualitative sustainability information, including reporting ESG and other sustainability aspects. The standard applies to the rules and procedures for carrying out verification by providing elements of a verification program, such as process, evidence-gathering activities and reporting.
The document addresses uncertainty in values and how to address these uncertainties. It also addresses primary and secondary data sources and how they relate to the strength of verification evidence.
The benefits include:
A jurisdictional approach aims to advance shared sustainability goals in landscapes defined by subnational governments’ administrative boundaries. Implementation needs a lot of government involvement compared to a landscape approach.
A landscape approach is a place-based management approach that sees stakeholders collaborating in a landscape to advance shared sustainability goals and build resilience.
It aims to reconcile and optimize social, economic and environmental goals across numerous economic sectors and land uses. Implementation is through land-use plans, policies, initiatives, long-term investments and other means.
The Kyoto Protocol is an international treaty that initially saw 37 nations and the EU-15 commit to reducing their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions based on scientific consensus. The treaty was adopted in Kyoto, Japan, in 1997 and was implemented eight years later in 2005.
The Kyoto Protocol, which currently has 192 parties committed, set a precedent for countries to act on the climate emergency. Its main mission was to control emissions of the main human-caused GHGs.
Its first commitment period ended in 2012 when a second commitment period, called the Doha Amendment, was agreed.
Landfill is the method of disposing of rubbish, also known as trash and garbage, by burying it underground.
A landscape approach is a place-based management approach that sees stakeholders collaborating in a landscape to advance shared sustainability goals and build resilience.
It aims to reconcile and optimize social, economic and environmental goals across numerous economic sectors and land uses. Implementation is through land-use plans, policies, initiatives, long-term investments and other means.
A jurisdictional approach aims to advance shared sustainability goals in landscapes defined by subnational governments’ administrative boundaries. Implementation needs a lot of government involvement compared to a landscape approach.
Life cycle assessment (LCA) aims to measure the environmental impact of a product or service throughout its existence.
A localvore is a person who only consumes food cultivated locally.
Long-term science-based targets are accomplished when decarbonization reaches over 90%, compared to baseline emissions, to achieve net zero by 2050, with residual targets addressed with neutralization.
Loss and damage are climate change-related consequences that people cannot adapt to. This is either because the consequence is too severe or the impacted community cannot access the resources to adapt. Loss and damage result from sudden natural disasters, such as floods, or gradual change, such as desertification.
A low-carbon economy releases minimal carbon into the atmosphere. This usually means adopting low-carbon power sources over fossil fuels.
The Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) is a certification and eco-labeling program for sustainable seafood.
Materiality considers all aspects of a business that may affect opportunity and risk. Investors have conventionally focused on financial materiality because their primary interest has been the bottom line – profitability. But things are changing, investors and regulators are now interested in non-financial materiality.
Understanding a company’s environmental, social and governance (ESG) material risks has multiple advantages. It enables the reporting of non-financial issues to improve investment decisions and risk and opportunity assessment, enhancing stakeholder engagement and helping to future-proof a company against regulatory and legal changes.
A materiality assessment formally assesses stakeholders’ commitment to specific ESG issues and determines an organization’s ESG score. It identifies the impact of a certain issue on a company’s performance and market competitiveness.
Methane (CH₄) is a greenhouse gas (GHG) and its presence in the atmosphere affects our climate system and Earth’s temperature. It is a primary component of natural gas. Although carbon dioxide (CO₂) has a longer-lasting effect on our climate, CH₄ has a much greater global warming potential (GWP) than CO₂.
According to the Environmental Defense Fund, CH₄ accounts for at least a quarter of today’s global warming. Agriculture, principally through manure and gastroenteric releases, but also rice cultivation, is responsible for around 25% of CH₄ emissions, followed by the energy sector.
Microfinance is a source of financial services for individuals or small businesses without access to traditional banking services. It can be a sustainable way of alleviating poverty by empowering entrepreneurs to build businesses and support their families and communities.
Microgeneration, or micro-energy, is the ability to produce energy on a small scale, e.g. a single wind turbine or home solar panels.
Microplastics are pieces of plastic, usually less than 5 mm long, found on land and water due to plastic pollution.
The mitigation hierarchy states that decarbonization should always come before beyond value chain mitigation (BVCM) compensation and neutralization. Net zero is only achievable through deep emission cuts, at least 90% by 2050, after which residual emissions are addressed with neutralization.
Modern slavery encompasses many forms, such as human trafficking and people born into slavery. There are various definitions, but all include aspects of control, involuntary actions and exploitation.
A modern slave might face violence or threats, be forced into inescapable debt, or have their passport taken away and face deportation. Many people have fallen into this trap trying to escape poverty or insecurity, improve their lives and support their families. Now, they cannot leave.
Monocropping is the agricultural practice of growing a single crop on the same land year after year. This does not include rotation through other crops or growing multiple crops on the same land, also known as polyculture.
Naked packaging refers to products sold without any packaging.
A nationally determined contribution (NDC) is a non-binding national plan outlining climate change mitigation, including greenhouse gas (GHG) emission reductions. Such plans also include policies and measures governments seek to introduce in response to climate change and to contribute to the Paris Agreement’s global targets.
Natural capital is the world’s assets, such as soil, air, water and living things.
Natural resources are raw materials or substances direct from nature, such as minerals, wood, water and fertile land. It also refers to materials we harvest, utilize and rely on.
Nature-based solutions are inspired and supported by nature and may offer environmental, economic and social benefits while increasing resilience.
They can be actions to protect, conserve, restore, sustainably use and manage natural or modified terrestrial, freshwater, coastal and marine ecosystems. Such actions address social, economic and environmental challenges effectively and adaptively while providing human well-being, ecosystem services and resilience and biodiversity benefits.
Nature positive concerns behavior and actions that increase biodiversity and the number of species, rather than cause their decline.
Near-term science-based targets cover the next 5-10 years, halving emissions compared to a baseline year. This is the first reality check on an organization’s journey to net zero by 2050.
Negative screening aims to identify organizations that engage in bad practices, such as arms dealing and cigarette production.
Net zero, also net-zero, concerns the balance between emitting and absorbing carbon in the atmosphere. It ultimately means cutting greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions to as close to zero as possible, with remaining emissions reabsorbed from the atmosphere by forests and oceans, etc.
Net zero is achieved when an organization eliminates all possible carbon emissions and compensates for remaining emissions with beyond value chain mitigation (BVCM). The net-zero process begins with calculating scopes 1, 2 and 3, agreeing on science-based targets, developing decarbonization pathways until 2030 and gradually moving toward long-term carbon capture, storage and sequestration for emissions that cannot be decreased.
Net Zero Asset Managers (NZAM) is an international group of asset managers dedicated to supporting the net-zero emissions by 2050 (or sooner) goal, aligning with global efforts to limit warming to 1.5°C. It also supports investments aligned with net-zero emissions by 2050 (or sooner).
The net-zero water approach sees a building or community only use the water that falls on-site. Net-zero water aims to limit the consumption of water resources before returning it to the same source.
Neutralization, or carbon dioxide (CO₂) removal (CDR), concerns removing carbon from the atmosphere and its permanent storage. Projects include direct air capture (DAC) and bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS).
Nitrous oxide (N₂O), colloquially called laughing gas, contributes to the greenhouse effect.
Further to natural sources, agriculture and fertilizers produce N₂O. Around 40% of N₂O emissions globally come from human activities. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has calculated that N₂O comprises about 6% of all GHG emissions, and its emissions rose 30% in the past 40 years.
The EU’s Non-Financial Reporting Directive (NFRD), or Directive 2014/95/EU, outlines the regulation for larger companies around disclosing non-financial and diversity information. The directive helps investors, consumers, policymakers and others gauge a company’s non-financial performance.
The NFRD was a step in the right direction, but is largely considered inadequate and replaceable. The NFRD has been particularly criticized because it implies that environmental, social and governance (ESG) have no financial relevance.
The EU’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) entered into force on January 5, 2023, and will replace the NFRD.
Offsetting entails reducing or removing carbon dioxide (CO₂) or other greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions to compensate for emissions made elsewhere. Such action allows organizations and individuals to invest in quantifiable environmental projects to balance their carbon emissions. It is part of corporate sustainability strategies that aim to reach net zero when it complements a decarbonization strategy. Offsetting technologies include carbon capture and reforestation.
Organic is a blanket term for anything that is or was a living organism. It is also an item that does not use pesticides or fertilizers, or usually have genetically modified ingredients.
Ozone (O₃) is a pale blue gas with three oxygen atoms that is present in different layers of our atmosphere. Generally, O₃ is not emitted into the air directly, but develops at ground level through a chemical reaction.
Ozone layer depletion does not cause global warming, but it can harm human health. The Stock Resilience Centre defines it as one of Earth’s boundaries. According to NASA, ozone layer negative shifts are offset by positive changes in human behavior that allow the ozone layer to reform.
Packaging waste recovery notes (PRN) and packaging waste export recovery notes (PERN) are the only legal forms to demonstrate that a producer is conducting the required amount of recovery and recycling.
The Paris Agreement, or Paris Climate Agreement, is a legally binding, international climate change treaty. The aim is to limit global warming to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels (1850-1900), preferably below 1.5°C, by the end of the century. The agreement was adopted by 196 nations at the UN’s COP21 in Paris in 2015. It came into force in 2016.
The Paris Agreement requests participating countries to act to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. These commitments are called nationally determined contributions (NDCs). It covers climate change mitigation, adaptation and finance. Within the agreement, countries developed an enhanced transparency framework (ETF) to report transparently and track progress on the actions taken.
Plasma arc heating involves heating municipal solid waste to extreme temperatures (3,000-10,000°C) using a plasma arc. Energy is released by electrical discharge in an inert atmosphere. This converts the organic waste into hydrogen-rich gas and non-organic waste into an inert glassy residue.
A plug-in hybrid electric vehicle has a rechargeable battery that recharges when connected via a charging cable to an external electric power source, additional to internally by the vehicle’s ICE-powered generator. A hybrid vehicle is primarily powered by a conventional internal combustion engine (ICE) but supplemented with power from regenerative braking.
Positive screening seeks to monitor an organization’s ethical performance by the good that it does.
Post-consumer refers to something used by consumers before it is reprocessed into a new product.
Preservation tries to keep something the same by preventing it from being damaged.
Product stewardship sees companies take responsibility for the environmental impacts of the products they make, sell or buy. This involves all product life cycle stages, including end-of-life management.
Pyrolysis is the action of heating waste to high temperatures to break down carbon content. This is through the absence of air to a mixture of gaseous and liquid fuels and solid residue. One example is the conversion of wood to charcoal.
The Rainforest Alliance works to conserve biodiversity and ensure sustainable livelihoods by transforming land use, business practices and consumer behavior.
Rainwater harvesting sees stormwater that falls on buildings collected and stored for later use to avoid it going straight to the drainage system.
The most common systems concern:
Reclaimed is the action of refurbishing waste materials for new products.
Recyclable refers to a product or material that can be collected, processed and manufactured into a new product.
Recycling refers to collecting and processing waste materials, ideally to make new products. A common form is recycling aluminum cans, which are melted down and reshaped for different uses, rather than ending up in landfills. Recycling materials with toxic waste, such as electronics, is a little trickier.
Reducing happens when an organization or person reduces harmful habits that produce waste.
Reforestation is the action of planting trees where a forest was depleted for commercial purposes.
Regeneration concerns improving ecological health and biodiversity through enabling, supporting and enhancing natural processes.
Remanufacturing is about rebuilding a product to its original specifications using a mix of reused, repaired and new parts.
Remineralization aims to restore mineral content and resources to an environment.
Renewable energy is typically electricity derived from natural, replenishable sources, such as geothermal, hydropower, solar and wind. Non-renewable resources, such as coal, oil and groundwater, have limited quantities.
Responsible innovation prioritizes ethics and social responsibility in researching, designing and producing new technologies or evolutions of existing technologies. Responsible innovation suggests that ethics is a design problem.
Restoration is the act of assisting an ecosystem to recover to a previous, more biodiverse condition.
The Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) promotes best practices and guidelines to decrease emissions and provides target-setting methods based on climate science.
The SBTi helps companies set carbon-reduction goals compliant with Paris Agreement targets. The initiative is a collaboration between the CDP (originally the Carbon Disclosure Project), UN Global Compact, World Resources Institute (WRI) and World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF). It is one of the We Mean Business Coalition commitments.
Scope 1-3 emissions are terms developed by the Greenhouse Gas Protocol (GHG Protocol). The levels allow organizations to categorize their emissions. Scope 3 has the most difficult emissions to track.
Scope 1 emissions are direct greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions released into the atmosphere from company-owned and controlled resources. Examples include on-site manufacturing and combustion, organization-owned fossil-fuel power plants and company fleet emissions.
Scope 2 emissions are indirect greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions released into the atmosphere from purchased energy from a utility provider. They include all GHG emissions from consuming purchased electricity, steam, heat and cooling. Investing in renewable energy sources could lower these emissions.
Scope 3 emissions, or value chain emissions, are indirect emissions from the reporting company’s upstream and downstream supply chain. There are 15 categories, including business travel, waste disposal and purchased goods and services.
Scope 4 emissions, commonly referred to as “avoided emissions”, are greenhouse gas (GHG) reductions occurring outside a product’s life cycle or value chain, but directly using that product.
Coined by the World Resources Institute (WRI) in 2013, the term extends carbon accounting’s scope beyond the direct and indirect emissions from operations (covered by scope 1-3) to include the positive impacts of products and services in reducing emissions elsewhere. For example, if an organization produces an energy-efficient appliance, emissions saved by consumer use, instead of a less efficient model, would fall under scope 4.
Secondary recovered fuel involves recovering energy from waste that cannot realistically be reused or recycled from mechanical and biological treatment processes.
Shared value is a management principle that seeks market opportunities for organizations to solve social problems. “Creating shared value” was first introduced in the Harvard Business Review in 2011, based on the principle that a company’s competitiveness and the health of its related communities are mutually dependent.
A sharing economy is a system whereby consumers share access to products or services, rather than having individual ownership. Examples include Airbnb, which matches people with a place or space to rent with those looking for a place to stay.
Sin stocks are investments associated with unethical or immoral activities according to an investor’s personal opinions. Activities may include alcohol, gambling, tobacco or adult entertainment.
Single use, sometimes single-use, refers to something, such as a product, that can only be used once before discarding.
A social bond sees proceeds specifically fund new and existing projects with social benefits like affordable housing and healthcare.
Social capital is the combined value of all social networks, the societal links and shared values enabling individuals and groups to work together.
A social enterprise is a for-profit organization with a core business model linked to a social cause. Profits are often reinvested into the business or related communities. Examples of causes include tackling social problems and improving communities and the environment.
Solar energy is energy derived from the Sun. Solar panels absorb the Sun’s radiation. This energy is captured, stored and regenerated into the electricity grid.
Solar panels cover two areas of generation:
The Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) was created by the Financial Stability Board (FSB) in 2015 to improve and increase reporting on climate-related financial information. Following the TCFD’s 2023 Status Report, upon FSB’s request, the TCFD was disbanded.
Thematic investing is the practice of investing in organizations that align with a particular investment theme, such as renewable energy, education or healthcare innovations.
A climate tipping point occurs when a slight change triggers a strongly nonlinear response in the internal dynamics of part of the climate system, qualitatively changing its future state.
Human-induced climate change could push several larger elements past their respective tipping points. Such elements include the Atlantic thermohaline circulation (THC), West Antarctic ice sheet, Greenland ice sheet, Amazon rainforest, boreal forests, West African monsoon, Indian summer monsoon and El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO).
Traceability is the ability to trace all processes, from procuring raw materials and production to consumption and disposal, to clarify when and where a product was produced and by whom.
A transition plan is a time-bound plan clearly outlining how an organization will achieve its strategy to pivot its existing assets, operations and business model to align with the latest and most ambitious climate science recommendations.
The triple bottom line (TBL), coined by famous British management consultant John Elkington in 1994, describes companies’ separate but interdependent financial, social and environmental “bottom lines”.
It sees a business prioritize people, the planet and profit equally. Such businesses may encourage proper healthcare, health and well-being, emphasize sustainable practices in operations and tie in social causes. These companies also retain profits and perfectly show how business and the environment can work together.
The UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) created an international environmental treaty to combat “dangerous human interference with the climate system”, partially through stabilizing greenhouse gases (GHGs) in the atmosphere. The treaty was signed by 154 nations during the UN Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED), also known as the Earth Summit, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It came into force in 1994.
The Kyoto Protocol was the first implementation of measures under the UNFCCC. This protocol was substituted by the Paris Agreement, which came into effect in 2016.
The UN Global Compact is a voluntary pact that promotes responsible business through 10 universally accepted principles and encourages action that advances broader societal goals, such as the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
The UN Principles for Responsible Investing (PRI) contains six principles under which asset owners and managers voluntarily commit to incorporating environmental, social and governance (ESG) issues into investment processes, active ownership and reporting, and promotes responsible investing across the industry.
The UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) provide “a shared blueprint for peace and prosperity for people and the planet, now and into the future.” Established in 2015, the 17 SDGs are an urgent call for action by all UN member states and are intended to be accomplished by 2030.
The SDGs form the framework for improving the lives of populations around the world and mitigating the hazardous human effects of climate change. The SDGs are:
The UN’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) is a milestone document in the history of human rights that defines the rights and freedoms of all people. Following World War II, the UN General Assembly adopted the UDHR on December 10, 1948, in Paris, France. It was drafted by representatives with various legal and cultural backgrounds.
Value chain emissions, also known as scope 3 emissions, are the most significant part of many companies’ corporate carbon footprint (CCF). The Greenhouse Gas Protocol (GHG Protocol) separates scope 3 emissions into 15 categories, including business travel, waste disposal and purchased goods and services. Of course, not every category is relevant to each company.
A value proposition considers the consumer. The consumer value is derived from a product, service or organization. For example, using recycled materials is a value proposition for climate-conscious consumers.
Vegan is a diet and lifestyle that avoids all animal-derived products.
Voluntary emission reductions (VER) are made voluntarily without mandate. They usually originate from an organization’s will to proactively tackle climate change. The voluntary market functions outside the compliance market. Organizations and individuals wishing to offset with no regulatory obligation can use VER. The carbon credits from VER cannot be used to meet Kyoto Protocol-stated governmental compliance measures.
The Voluntary Sustainability Reporting Standard for Non-Listed SMEs (VSME) is for unlisted micro, small and medium-sized enterprises that face increasing environmental, social and governance (ESG) reporting requirements and are being challenged to meet business partner, financial institution and investor expectations. The VSME is a proportional alternative to the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD).
The benefits are diverse and include:
A waste stream is the complete flow of a specific domestic or industrial waste type through to recovery, recycling or disposal.
A water footprint is the total volume of freshwater used to produce goods and services consumed by an individual, community, nation or the planet.
Water scarcity happens when all demands for water supply or quality cannot be met.
Water security involves providing safe access to adequate water quantity and quality for sustaining humans, protecting ecosystems and socioeconomic development. This helps prevent waterborne pollution and related disasters, as well as preserve ecosystems in a climate of peace and political stability (from UN Water). Decreased water security is a result of climate change.
Water self-sufficiency is the ratio of the internal water footprint to the country’s total water footprint. It indicates the national capability of supplying the water needed for producing the domestic demand for goods and services.
Weather concerns the atmosphere’s state at a particular place and time, including pressure, temperature, wind, humidity, rainfall and cloud cover. Weather differs from climate, which is all weather conditions for a particular location averaged over about 30 years.
Whitewashing is when an organization covers up or glosses over scandalous information by subjectively representing information.
Wind energy comes from wind turbines. This renewable energy has grown in popularity, although it is not perfect because turbines are clunky, require tons of precious metal and hurt surrounding wildlife. That said, this clean energy is abundant and improvements are being made.
Wish-cycling is an aspirational approach to recycling without knowing if the material is recyclable, but expecting it to be properly dealt with.
Zero carbon means that a product or service produces no carbon emissions. Renewables like wind and solar are considered zero carbon because they do not emit carbon when producing electricity. Where net zero refers to canceling or balancing carbon an organization produces, zero carbon refers to a product or service emitting no carbon dioxide equivalent (CO₂e). Net zero also means an activity releases net-zero carbon emissions into the atmosphere.
Zero waste refers to eliminating waste, not consuming new or recovering resources, and keeping products out of landfills and incinerators or being left on the ground/discarded in nature. The concept concerns managing products, packaging and materials responsibly to minimize environmental harm. Minimal waste is a more realistic expression because it is impossible to create zero waste.
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